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Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes, PJ Harvey nominated for Brit Awards

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Ryan Adams, Laura Marling and Kate Bush are also in the running for awards Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and PJ Harvey have been nominated for this year's Brit Awards. Bon Iver is nominated in two categories, firstly for Best International Male where he is up alongside Aloe Blacc, Bruno Mars, David Guetta and Ryan Adams and secondly for Best International Newcomer, where he is up against Aloe Blacc, Foster The People, Lana Del Rey and Nicki Minaj. Fleet Foxes are in the running for Best International Group, where they face competition from Foo Fighters, Jay -Z and Kanye West, Lady Antebellum and Maroon 5. PJ Harvey is nominated for Best British Album alongside Coldplay, Adele, Florence And The Machine and Ed Sheeran, while Kate Bush is up for Best British Female as well as Adele, Florence And The Machine, Jessie J and Laura Marling. Arctic Monkeys and Elbow are both nominated for Best British Group, where they are up alongside Chase & Status, Coldplay and Kasabian, while Feist and Bjork are both nominated for Best International Female as well as Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Rihanna. Visit Brits.co.uk for the full list of nominees. The Brit Awards will take place at the O2 Arena on February 21 next year. Blur will receive the Outstanding Contribution To Music award at the 2012 event. Previous winners of that gong include the band's Britpop rivals Oasis, as well as Paul McCartney, The Who, U2 and Queen.

Ryan Adams, Laura Marling and Kate Bush are also in the running for awards

Bon Iver, Fleet Foxes and PJ Harvey have been nominated for this year’s Brit Awards.

Bon Iver is nominated in two categories, firstly for Best International Male where he is up alongside Aloe Blacc, Bruno Mars, David Guetta and Ryan Adams and secondly for Best International Newcomer, where he is up against Aloe Blacc, Foster The People, Lana Del Rey and Nicki Minaj.

Fleet Foxes are in the running for Best International Group, where they face competition from Foo Fighters, Jay -Z and Kanye West, Lady Antebellum and Maroon 5.

PJ Harvey is nominated for Best British Album alongside Coldplay, Adele, Florence And The Machine and Ed Sheeran, while Kate Bush is up for Best British Female as well as Adele, Florence And The Machine, Jessie J and Laura Marling.

Arctic Monkeys and Elbow are both nominated for Best British Group, where they are up alongside Chase & Status, Coldplay and Kasabian, while Feist and Bjork are both nominated for Best International Female as well as Lady Gaga, Beyonce and Rihanna.

Visit Brits.co.uk for the full list of nominees.

The Brit Awards will take place at the O2 Arena on February 21 next year. Blur will receive the Outstanding Contribution To Music award at the 2012 event.

Previous winners of that gong include the band’s Britpop rivals Oasis, as well as Paul McCartney, The Who, U2 and Queen.

Watch the trailer for the new LCD Soundsystem film

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'Shut Up And Play The Hits' premieres at the Sundance Film Festival later this month 'Shut Up And Play The Hits', a film documenting LCD Soundsystem's last show at New York's Madison Square Garden in April 2011, is set to screen at the Sundance Film Festival later this month. Scroll down to watch the trailer for the film, which was directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace. "If it's a funeral… let's have the best funeral ever," reads the film’s tagline. The film will premiere on January 22 at the US film festival. The band's former frontman, James Murphy, also appears as an 'ageing Brooklyn hipster' in new film 'The Comedy', which will also screen at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival (January 19-29, 2012) in Utah. The film was directed by Rick Alverson and stars Tim Heidecker as a man who "whiles away his days with a group of ageing Brooklyn hipsters, engaging in acts of recreational cruelty and pacified boredom," reports Pitchfork. Co-produced by the independent record label Jagjaguwar, the film is pitched as: "A scathing look at the white male on the verge of collapse, Rick Alverson’s carefully observed portrait provokes and disorients; a cautionary fable for the autumn of the American Era." For more information, visit Glasseyepix.com and Jagjaguwar. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_FAUyrFWDvw

‘Shut Up And Play The Hits’ premieres at the Sundance Film Festival later this month

‘Shut Up And Play The Hits’, a film documenting LCD Soundsystem‘s last show at New York’s Madison Square Garden in April 2011, is set to screen at the Sundance Film Festival later this month.

Scroll down to watch the trailer for the film, which was directed by Dylan Southern and Will Lovelace. “If it’s a funeral… let’s have the best funeral ever,” reads the film’s tagline.

The film will premiere on January 22 at the US film festival. The band’s former frontman, James Murphy, also appears as an ‘ageing Brooklyn hipster’ in new film ‘The Comedy’, which will also screen at the 2012 Sundance Film Festival (January 19-29, 2012) in Utah.

The film was directed by Rick Alverson and stars Tim Heidecker as a man who “whiles away his days with a group of ageing Brooklyn hipsters, engaging in acts of recreational cruelty and pacified boredom,” reports Pitchfork.

Co-produced by the independent record label Jagjaguwar, the film is pitched as: “A scathing look at the white male on the verge of collapse, Rick Alverson’s carefully observed portrait provokes and disorients; a cautionary fable for the autumn of the American Era.”

For more information, visit Glasseyepix.com and Jagjaguwar.

Michael Eavis say he has ‘sorted’ the headliners for Glastonbury 2013

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Organiser also talks up his 50th anniversary plans for the Worthy Farm event Michael Eavis has said that the headliners for Glastonbury 2013 are "already sorted". The festival will not take place this summer as it now takes a customary year off once in every five, but the organiser has said that this has not stopped him from booking the festival's bill toppers for when it returns in 2013. Speaking to BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat, Eavis responded to a question about what stage he was at in booking his headliners for 2013 by saying that they were "already sorted", but gave no clues about who they might be. Eavis also spoke about his plans for the festival's 50th anniversary celebrations in 2020 and said that he was determined to see the Worthy Farm event celebrate the milestone. He said: "I'm really determined somehow or other to make the 50 years - I don't see why I shouldn't make it. Strangely enough, I do feel incredibly fit. I don't see why I shouldn't make it. I've got the bands who want to play and the people who want to buy the tickets so why shouldn't we carry on?" Eavis' comments suggest he has reversed his opinion on the future of the festival after he said last year that Glastonbury may only take place for another "three or four years" and that music fans are generally growing bored of festivals. The Glastonbury organiser was speaking before he was honoured with a Lifetime achievement award at the European Festival Awards ceremony in Groningen, Holland last night (January 11). Coldplay won the award for Best Headliner and Festival Anthem Of The Year at the event, while James Blake was awarded Best Newcomer. Hungarian festival Sziget won the award for Best Major European Festival.

Organiser also talks up his 50th anniversary plans for the Worthy Farm event

Michael Eavis has said that the headliners for Glastonbury 2013 are “already sorted”.

The festival will not take place this summer as it now takes a customary year off once in every five, but the organiser has said that this has not stopped him from booking the festival’s bill toppers for when it returns in 2013.

Speaking to BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat, Eavis responded to a question about what stage he was at in booking his headliners for 2013 by saying that they were “already sorted”, but gave no clues about who they might be.

Eavis also spoke about his plans for the festival’s 50th anniversary celebrations in 2020 and said that he was determined to see the Worthy Farm event celebrate the milestone.

He said: “I’m really determined somehow or other to make the 50 years – I don’t see why I shouldn’t make it. Strangely enough, I do feel incredibly fit. I don’t see why I shouldn’t make it. I’ve got the bands who want to play and the people who want to buy the tickets so why shouldn’t we carry on?”

Eavis’ comments suggest he has reversed his opinion on the future of the festival after he said last year that Glastonbury may only take place for another “three or four years” and that music fans are generally growing bored of festivals.

The Glastonbury organiser was speaking before he was honoured with a Lifetime achievement award at the European Festival Awards ceremony in Groningen, Holland last night (January 11).

Coldplay won the award for Best Headliner and Festival Anthem Of The Year at the event, while James Blake was awarded Best Newcomer. Hungarian festival Sziget won the award for Best Major European Festival.

The Hold Steady’s Craig Finn announces March UK and Ireland tour

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Singer will support the Felice Brothers on their UK trek The Hold Steady frontman Craig Finn has announced a run of UK and Ireland shows for March. The singer, who also plays a solo show at London's Rough Trade East on January 25, will support folk duo The Felice Brothers at seven shows throughout March. The gigs kick off at London's MacBeth venue on March 13 and run until March 20 when Finn and the Felice Brothers play the UK capital's Koko venue. Craig Finn releases his debut solo album, which is titled 'Clear Heart Full Eyes', on January 23. It contains 11 tracks in all and has produced by Spoon/And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead knob twiddler Mike McCarthy. Finn has previously described the album as "quieter" than his work with The Hold Steady and said he "wanted to gain some experience of making a record with new people". He said of 'Clear Heart Full Eyes': "I had written a bunch of songs that were outside of the norm for The Hold Steady, a little quieter and perhaps more narrative. I wanted to gain some experience and insight into the process of making a record by working with new people." The Felice Brothers/Craig Finn will play: London MacBeth (13) Birmingham HMV Institute (14) Dublin Academy
(15) Belfast Spring & Airbrake (16) Glasgow ABC (17) 
 Manchester Academy 2 (18) London Koko (20)

Singer will support the Felice Brothers on their UK trek

The Hold Steady frontman Craig Finn has announced a run of UK and Ireland shows for March.

The singer, who also plays a solo show at London’s Rough Trade East on January 25, will support folk duo The Felice Brothers at seven shows throughout March.

The gigs kick off at London’s MacBeth venue on March 13 and run until March 20 when Finn and the Felice Brothers play the UK capital’s Koko venue.

Craig Finn releases his debut solo album, which is titled ‘Clear Heart Full Eyes’, on January 23. It contains 11 tracks in all and has produced by Spoon/And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead knob twiddler Mike McCarthy.

Finn has previously described the album as “quieter” than his work with The Hold Steady and said he “wanted to gain some experience of making a record with new people”.

He said of ‘Clear Heart Full Eyes’: “I had written a bunch of songs that were outside of the norm for The Hold Steady, a little quieter and perhaps more narrative. I wanted to gain some experience and insight into the process of making a record by working with new people.”

The Felice Brothers/Craig Finn will play:

London MacBeth (13)

Birmingham HMV Institute (14)

Dublin Academy
(15)

Belfast Spring & Airbrake (16)

Glasgow ABC (17) 


Manchester Academy 2 (18)

London Koko (20)

The Handsome Family announce May UK tour

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The husband and wife duo will play eight shows The Handsome Family have announced plans for an eight date tour of the UK this May. The alt.country duo, made up of husband and wife team Brett and Rennie Sparks will begin the tour at Leeds' Brudenell Social Club on May 16, before dates in Glasgow, Bristol, Liverpool, Manchester and Oxford, finishing up in London at the 100 Club on May 27. The pair will be playing new songs at the run of shows. The band last released an album in 2008 - their eighth studio album, 'Honey Moon'. The Handsome Family will play: Leeds Brudenell Social Club (May 16) Glasgow St Andrews In The Square (17) Belfast Spring & Airbrake (19) Bristol The Fleece (21) Liverpool Leaf (23) Manchester St. Clement's Church (24) Oxford Bullingdon Arms (25) London 100 Club (27)

The husband and wife duo will play eight shows

The Handsome Family have announced plans for an eight date tour of the UK this May.

The alt.country duo, made up of husband and wife team Brett and Rennie Sparks will begin the tour at Leeds’ Brudenell Social Club on May 16, before dates in Glasgow, Bristol, Liverpool, Manchester and Oxford, finishing up in London at the 100 Club on May 27.

The pair will be playing new songs at the run of shows. The band last released an album in 2008 – their eighth studio album, ‘Honey Moon’.

The Handsome Family will play:

Leeds Brudenell Social Club (May 16)

Glasgow St Andrews In The Square (17)

Belfast Spring & Airbrake (19)

Bristol The Fleece (21)

Liverpool Leaf (23)

Manchester St. Clement’s Church (24)

Oxford Bullingdon Arms (25)

London 100 Club (27)

The Second Uncut Playlist Of 2012

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In case you’ve stumbled across https://www.www.uncut.co.uk for the first time in the wake of our redesign, each week I post a list of the music we’ve played in the Uncut office. It’s not meant in any way to be a list of recommendations, simply a catalogue of things we’ve listened to – though in most cases we’re broadly positive about the artists featured. A few things I’m not personally crazy about among this batch, but plenty of goodness, too: notably the Forsyth/Holtkamp jam, Eyvind Kang, Leonard Cohen, Sun Araw Vs The Congos and Hiss Golden Messenger’s “Wah-Wah Cowboys” mixtape, plus I’m still kind of amazed at liking a Tindersticks album again. The website makeover has unfortunately meant that all of your old comments were erased in the switchover, but please let’s get some conversations going on the Facebook Comments threads below. Let me know what you feel about this lot, and indeed about what you’re listening to this week, and I’ll wade in when I get a moment. And thanks, as ever, for your indulgence. 1 Moebius & Renziehausen – Ersatz (Bureau B) 2 Django Django – Django Django (Because) 3 Tindersticks – The Something Rain (Lucky Dog) 4 Dolphins Into The Future – Canto Arquipélago (Underwater People) 5 Nuojuva – Valot Kaukaa (Preservation) 6 The Magnetic Fields – Love At The Bottom Of The Sea (Domino) 7 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow) http://blackestrainbowrecords.bandcamp.com/album/early-astral 8 The Caravelles – Hey Mama You’ve Been On My Mind (RPM) 9 Various Artists – Blues Control Playlist (http://igetrvng.com/playlists/64) 10 Masaki Batoh – Brain Pulse Music (Drag City) 11 Toy – Left Myself Behind (Heavenly) 12 Eyvind Kang – The Narrow Garden (Ipecac) 13 Paul Weller – Sonik Kicks (Island) 14 The Shins – Port Of Morrow (Columbia) 15 White Hills – Frying On This Rock (Thrill Jockey) 16 Various Artists – Wah-Wah Cowboys (http://hissgoldenmessenger.blogspot.com/) https://www.uncut.co.uk/blog/wild-mercury-sound/wah-wah-cowboys-volume-two 17 Goldfrapp – The Singles (Mute) 18 Leonard Cohen – The Darkness (Columbia) https://www.uncut.co.uk/leonard-cohen/leonard-cohen-posts-new-single-the-darkness-online-news 19 Matthew Bourne – Montauk Variations (Leaf) 20 Sun Araw & M Geddes Gengras Meet The Congos – Icon Give Thank (RVNG Intl) 21 Julia Holter – Marienbad (RVNG Intl) 22 Lambchop – Mr M (City Slang) Follow me on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/#!/JohnRMulvey

In case you’ve stumbled across https://www.www.uncut.co.uk for the first time in the wake of our redesign, each week I post a list of the music we’ve played in the Uncut office.

It’s not meant in any way to be a list of recommendations, simply a catalogue of things we’ve listened to – though in most cases we’re broadly positive about the artists featured. A few things I’m not personally crazy about among this batch, but plenty of goodness, too: notably the Forsyth/Holtkamp jam, Eyvind Kang, Leonard Cohen, Sun Araw Vs The Congos and Hiss Golden Messenger’s “Wah-Wah Cowboys” mixtape, plus I’m still kind of amazed at liking a Tindersticks album again.

The website makeover has unfortunately meant that all of your old comments were erased in the switchover, but please let’s get some conversations going on the Facebook Comments threads below. Let me know what you feel about this lot, and indeed about what you’re listening to this week, and I’ll wade in when I get a moment. And thanks, as ever, for your indulgence.

1 Moebius & Renziehausen – Ersatz (Bureau B)

2 Django Django – Django Django (Because)

3 Tindersticks – The Something Rain (Lucky Dog)

4 Dolphins Into The Future – Canto Arquipélago (Underwater People)

5 Nuojuva – Valot Kaukaa (Preservation)

6 The Magnetic Fields – Love At The Bottom Of The Sea (Domino)

7 Chris Forsyth & Koen Holtkamp – Early Astral (Blackest Rainbow) http://blackestrainbowrecords.bandcamp.com/album/early-astral

8 The Caravelles – Hey Mama You’ve Been On My Mind (RPM)

9 Various Artists – Blues Control Playlist (http://igetrvng.com/playlists/64)

10 Masaki Batoh – Brain Pulse Music (Drag City)

11 Toy – Left Myself Behind (Heavenly)

12 Eyvind Kang – The Narrow Garden (Ipecac)

13 Paul Weller – Sonik Kicks (Island)

14 The Shins – Port Of Morrow (Columbia)

15 White Hills – Frying On This Rock (Thrill Jockey)

16 Various Artists – Wah-Wah Cowboys (http://hissgoldenmessenger.blogspot.com/) https://www.uncut.co.uk/blog/wild-mercury-sound/wah-wah-cowboys-volume-two

17 Goldfrapp – The Singles (Mute)

18 Leonard Cohen – The Darkness (Columbia) https://www.uncut.co.uk/leonard-cohen/leonard-cohen-posts-new-single-the-darkness-online-news

19 Matthew Bourne – Montauk Variations (Leaf)

20 Sun Araw & M Geddes Gengras Meet The Congos – Icon Give Thank (RVNG Intl)

21 Julia Holter – Marienbad (RVNG Intl)

22 Lambchop – Mr M (City Slang)

Follow me on Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/#!/JohnRMulvey

Jack White haggles for an elephant’s head on US TV show

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The former White Stripes man appears on 'American Pickers' Jack White and the studio for his label Third Man Records have both appeared on a show called American Pickers on the US History Channel. The White Stripes' former frontman appeared on American Pickers, which was broadcast in the US earlier this week. In it he bartered for an elephant's head and attempted to sell a photobooth and jukebox to the show's hosts at his Third Man Records studio in Nashville. The photobooth was used in the video for 'Hang You From The Heavens' by The Dead Weather. "That is the weirdest looking giraffe I've ever seen," jokes White as the taxidermied elephant head is unpacked in front of him. "I love the majesty of taxidermy," he adds in an online clip from the show. American Pickers sees two men - Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz – travel across the United States and "scour the country's junkyards, basements and barns for hidden gems". For more information visit: www.history.com/shows/american-pickers Since leaving The White Stripes, White has collaborated with rappers the Insane Clown Posse and released a remix album featuring Queens Of The Stone Age's Josh Homme, Beck, and Mark Lanegan on Third Man Records. Jack White recently revealed that he has collaborated with Tom Jones for a one-off release on Third Man Records. The Welsh crooner recorded a version of his 2002 track 'Jezebel' and a cover of Howlin' Wolf's 'Evil' for the release, which is set to be the latest in the label's 'Blue Series'.

The former White Stripes man appears on ‘American Pickers’

Jack White and the studio for his label Third Man Records have both appeared on a show called American Pickers on the US History Channel.

The White Stripes‘ former frontman appeared on American Pickers, which was broadcast in the US earlier this week. In it he bartered for an elephant’s head and attempted to sell a photobooth and jukebox to the show’s hosts at his Third Man Records studio in Nashville. The photobooth was used in the video for ‘Hang You From The Heavens’ by The Dead Weather.

“That is the weirdest looking giraffe I’ve ever seen,” jokes White as the taxidermied elephant head is unpacked in front of him. “I love the majesty of taxidermy,” he adds in an online clip from the show.

American Pickers sees two men – Mike Wolfe and Frank Fritz – travel across the United States and “scour the country’s junkyards, basements and barns for hidden gems”. For more information visit: www.history.com/shows/american-pickers

Since leaving The White Stripes, White has collaborated with rappers the Insane Clown Posse and released a remix album featuring Queens Of The Stone Age’s Josh Homme, Beck, and Mark Lanegan on Third Man Records.

Jack White recently revealed that he has collaborated with Tom Jones for a one-off release on Third Man Records. The Welsh crooner recorded a version of his 2002 track ‘Jezebel’ and a cover of Howlin’ Wolf’s ‘Evil’ for the release, which is set to be the latest in the label’s ‘Blue Series’.

The Velvet Underground file lawsuit over iconic banana symbol

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Defunct band block Andy Warhol image from their 1967 album being used on iPads and iPhones The Velvet Underground have filed a lawsuit seeking to block its iconic Andy Warhol-designed banana being used on covers for iPads and iPhones. The defunct 1960's band, formed by Lou Reed and John Cale, has announced it is taking action against the Andy Warhol Foundation after reading newspaper reports in the past year that the foundation had agreed to license the banana design to a series of cases, sleeves and bags. According to the lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court, the group have claimed the iconic banana design is synonymous with The Velvet Underground, which features on their 1967 album 'The Velvet Underground And Nico'. The design, which was never officially copyrighted, "became a symbol, truly an icon, of The Velvet Underground for some 25 years", court papers added, reports Reuters. The Velvet Underground is seeking an injunction blocking the use of the banana by third parties, a declaration that the Warhol Foundation has no copyright interest in the design, unspecified damages, and a share of the profits made by the Warhol Foundation from any licensing deals. The band's drummer Moe Tucker recently found herself linked to the Tea Party movement in the US after she appeared in TV footage suggesting she was supporter.

Defunct band block Andy Warhol image from their 1967 album being used on iPads and iPhones

The Velvet Underground have filed a lawsuit seeking to block its iconic Andy Warhol-designed banana being used on covers for iPads and iPhones.

The defunct 1960’s band, formed by Lou Reed and John Cale, has announced it is taking action against the Andy Warhol Foundation after reading newspaper reports in the past year that the foundation had agreed to license the banana design to a series of cases, sleeves and bags.

According to the lawsuit filed in Manhattan federal court, the group have claimed the iconic banana design is synonymous with The Velvet Underground, which features on their 1967 album ‘The Velvet Underground And Nico’.

The design, which was never officially copyrighted, “became a symbol, truly an icon, of The Velvet Underground for some 25 years”, court papers added, reports Reuters.

The Velvet Underground is seeking an injunction blocking the use of the banana by third parties, a declaration that the Warhol Foundation has no copyright interest in the design, unspecified damages, and a share of the profits made by the Warhol Foundation from any licensing deals.

The band’s drummer Moe Tucker recently found herself linked to the Tea Party movement in the US after she appeared in TV footage suggesting she was supporter.

Roxy Music’s Bryan Ferry marries for the second time

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Singer ties the knot with Amanda Sheppard in the Caribbean Roxy Music's Bryan Ferry has married his girlfriend Amanda Sheppard in a "simple, private ceremony". According to the Daily Telegraph, the veteran singer tied the knot with the fashion PR on January 4 at the exclusive Amanyara resort. The pair have been dating since being introduced by one of Ferry's sons in 2009. Confirming the marriage, 66-year-old Ferry commented on the 37-year age gap between the pair, saying: "You never meet people your own age who aren’t married. Unless they are divorcees knocking about, that sort of thing." He also refused to rule out having children with Sheppard, stating: "Oh, I never feel comfortable predicting the future." Ferry divorced his first wife, Lucy Helmore, in 2003 after 21 years of marriage. He has four sons from the relationship - Merlin, Tara, Isaac and Otis. The singer was hospitalised with heart problems last year, but has said he now feels much fitter. Ferry's last album was 2010's 'Olympia', which included collaborations with the likes of Radiohead's Jonny Greenwood and Scissor Sisters.

Singer ties the knot with Amanda Sheppard in the Caribbean

Roxy Music‘s Bryan Ferry has married his girlfriend Amanda Sheppard in a “simple, private ceremony”.

According to the Daily Telegraph, the veteran singer tied the knot with the fashion PR on January 4 at the exclusive Amanyara resort. The pair have been dating since being introduced by one of Ferry’s sons in 2009.

Confirming the marriage, 66-year-old Ferry commented on the 37-year age gap between the pair, saying: “You never meet people your own age who aren’t married. Unless they are divorcees knocking about, that sort of thing.”

He also refused to rule out having children with Sheppard, stating: “Oh, I never feel comfortable predicting the future.”

Ferry divorced his first wife, Lucy Helmore, in 2003 after 21 years of marriage. He has four sons from the relationship – Merlin, Tara, Isaac and Otis.

The singer was hospitalised with heart problems last year, but has said he now feels much fitter.

Ferry’s last album was 2010’s ‘Olympia’, which included collaborations with the likes of Radiohead‘s Jonny Greenwood and Scissor Sisters.

Leonard Cohen posts new single ‘The Darkness’ online

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Hear latest cut from singer's 'Old Ideas' album on Uncut.co.uk Leonard Cohen has posted his new single 'The Darkness' online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen. The track, which was made available online via Pitchfork, is the latest track to be taken from the singer's new album 'Old Ideas', which is set for release on January 30. The album's first single, 'Show Me The Place', was posted online in November last year. 'Old Ideas' is the legendary singer songwriter's first new offering since 2004's 'Dear Heather', and his 12th studio album since 1967. Made up of 10 tracks, recording for the album started in January 2011, though some of the songs have been in the works for much longer, with 'Lullaby' and 'The Darkness' performed live on Cohen's last world tour. The album was produced by Patrick Leonard, Anjani Thomas, Ed Sanders and Dino Soldo and features backing vocals from Dana Glover, Sharon Robinson, The Webb Sisters and longtime Cohen collaborator Jennifer Warnes. The tracklisting of 'Old Ideas' is: 'Going Home' 'Amen' 'Show Me The Place' 'The Darkness' 'Anyhow' 'Crazy To Love You' 'Come Healing' 'Banjo' 'Lullaby' 'Different Sides'

Hear latest cut from singer’s ‘Old Ideas’ album on Uncut.co.uk

Leonard Cohen has posted his new single ‘The Darkness’ online – scroll down to the bottom of the page and click to listen.

The track, which was made available online via Pitchfork, is the latest track to be taken from the singer’s new album ‘Old Ideas’, which is set for release on January 30. The album’s first single, ‘Show Me The Place’, was posted online in November last year.

‘Old Ideas’ is the legendary singer songwriter’s first new offering since 2004’s ‘Dear Heather’, and his 12th studio album since 1967.

Made up of 10 tracks, recording for the album started in January 2011, though some of the songs have been in the works for much longer, with ‘Lullaby’ and ‘The Darkness’ performed live on Cohen’s last world tour.

The album was produced by Patrick Leonard, Anjani Thomas, Ed Sanders and Dino Soldo and features backing vocals from Dana Glover, Sharon Robinson, The Webb Sisters and longtime Cohen collaborator Jennifer Warnes.

The tracklisting of ‘Old Ideas’ is:

‘Going Home’

‘Amen’

‘Show Me The Place’

‘The Darkness’

‘Anyhow’

‘Crazy To Love You’

‘Come Healing’

‘Banjo’

‘Lullaby’

‘Different Sides’

Depeche Mode’s Vince Clarke and Martin Gore announce new album details

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VCMC release 'Ssss' on March 12. Vince Clarke and Martin Gore of the original Depeche Mode line-up have announced details of their collaborative album 'Ssss'. Set for release on March 12 through Mute, the 10-track album sees the duo working together for the first time in over 30 years. Gore is still a member of Depeche Mode - current line-up pictured above - but Vince Clarke left the band after the release of their 1981 album 'Speak & Spell', before going on to make music with Erasure and Yazoo. The album, which is being attributed to VCMG, was made with both men working separately from their own studios and developing tracks via email. 'Ssss' was written and produced by Clarke and Gore. Last summer, Gore told Billboard that the project "was something different, and we didn't have conversations about it. It was more just like emails and filesharing. It was something completely different no vocals, all instrumental stuff." The 'Ssss' tracklisting is: 'Lowly' 'Zaat' 'Spock' 'Windup Robot' 'Bendy Bass' 'Single Blip' 'Skip This Track' 'Aftermaths' 'Recycle' 'Flux'

VCMC release ‘Ssss’ on March 12.

Vince Clarke and Martin Gore of the original Depeche Mode line-up have announced details of their collaborative album ‘Ssss’.

Set for release on March 12 through Mute, the 10-track album sees the duo working together for the first time in over 30 years. Gore is still a member of Depeche Mode – current line-up pictured above – but Vince Clarke left the band after the release of their 1981 album ‘Speak & Spell’, before going on to make music with Erasure and Yazoo.

The album, which is being attributed to VCMG, was made with both men working separately from their own studios and developing tracks via email. ‘Ssss’ was written and produced by Clarke and Gore.

Last summer, Gore told Billboard that the project “was something different, and we didn’t have conversations about it. It was more just like emails and filesharing. It was something completely different no vocals, all instrumental stuff.”

The ‘Ssss’ tracklisting is:

‘Lowly’

‘Zaat’

‘Spock’

‘Windup Robot’

‘Bendy Bass’

‘Single Blip’

‘Skip This Track’

‘Aftermaths’

‘Recycle’

‘Flux’

Blur’s Graham Coxon announces UK solo tour for April

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Guitarist wants fans to help choose his tour support. Graham Coxon has announced an extensive UK tour for April. The Blur guitarist, who releases his eighth solo album 'A+E' on April 2, will play 14 shows across the UK. These begin at Oxford's O2 Academy on April 13 and run until April 30 when Coxon will headline Falmouth's Princess Pavilions venue. Coxon is also offering local bands the chance to support him at each one of the shows and has revealed that he will be picking his opening act for each night of the tour from a fan voted poll on his website. Bands can submit their tracks to toursupport.grahamcoxon.co.uk and these will then be available to be heard by all visitors to his site. Speaking to NME about what he would like to see from the bands who submit their tracks, Coxon said: "I'll be very open to different sounding groups – it'll be interesting to see who applies. I do like music that has a bit of urgency, a punk rock spirit to it, though". To read a new interview with Graham Coxon in which he talks about his new album and the future of Blur, pick up this week's issue of NME, which is on UK newsstands and available digitally now. Graham Coxon will play: O2 Academy Oxford (April 13) Gateshead Sage (15) Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (16) Glasgow Garage (17) Manchester Sound Control (19) Sheffield Leadmill (20) Nottingham Rescue Rooms (21) Brighton Concorde (23) Cambridge Junction (24) London HMV Forum (25) Gloucester Guildhall (27) Bristol Trinity (28) Exeter Phoenix (29) Falmouth Princess Pavilions (30) Tickets go on sale on Friday (January 13) at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of Graham Coxon tickets and get all the latest listings, go to NME.COM/TICKETS now, or call 0871 230 1094.

Guitarist wants fans to help choose his tour support.

Graham Coxon has announced an extensive UK tour for April.

The Blur guitarist, who releases his eighth solo album ‘A+E’ on April 2, will play 14 shows across the UK. These begin at Oxford’s O2 Academy on April 13 and run until April 30 when Coxon will headline Falmouth’s Princess Pavilions venue.

Coxon is also offering local bands the chance to support him at each one of the shows and has revealed that he will be picking his opening act for each night of the tour from a fan voted poll on his website.

Bands can submit their tracks to toursupport.grahamcoxon.co.uk and these will then be available to be heard by all visitors to his site.

Speaking to NME about what he would like to see from the bands who submit their tracks, Coxon said: “I’ll be very open to different sounding groups – it’ll be interesting to see who applies. I do like music that has a bit of urgency, a punk rock spirit to it, though”.

To read a new interview with Graham Coxon in which he talks about his new album and the future of Blur, pick up this week’s issue of NME, which is on UK newsstands and available digitally now.

Graham Coxon will play:

O2 Academy Oxford (April 13)

Gateshead Sage (15)

Edinburgh Liquid Rooms (16)

Glasgow Garage (17)

Manchester Sound Control (19)

Sheffield Leadmill (20)

Nottingham Rescue Rooms (21)

Brighton Concorde (23)

Cambridge Junction (24)

London HMV Forum (25)

Gloucester Guildhall (27)

Bristol Trinity (28)

Exeter Phoenix (29)

Falmouth Princess Pavilions (30)

Tickets go on sale on Friday (January 13) at 9am (GMT). To check the availability of Graham Coxon tickets and get all the latest listings, go to NME.COM/TICKETS now, or call 0871 230 1094.

The Uncut Readers’ Top 50 Of 2011

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Just before Christmas, you may remember, I asked for your 2011 Top Tens, in response to my lengthy end-of-year effort. I’ve done the maths now, anyhow, and am pleased to present a Top 50 compiled from your votes. Readers of the magazine may notice certain uncanny similarities with the Uncut writers’ Top 50 that we published in our issue out at the start of December: I know it looks like a bit of a fix, but this is genuinely how the numbers panned out. Thanks again for helping us out with this. A good way to celebrate the launch of our new site, I think: please take a look around and let us know how it’s all working. 50 ONEOHTRIX POINT NEVER Replica (SOFTWARE) 49 FUCKED UP David Comes To Life (MATADOR) 48 WOODEN SHJIPS West (THRILL JOCKEY) 47 JULIANNA BARWICK The Magic Place (ASTHMATIC KITTY) 46 TIM HECKER Ravedeath, 1972 (KRANKY) 45 FEIST Metals (POLYDOR) 44 YOUTH LAGOON Year Of Hibernation (FAT POSSUM) 43 A.A.BONDY Believers (TURNSTILE) 42 DESTROYER Kaputt (DEAD OCEANS) 41 DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS Go-Go Boots (PLAY IT AGAIN SAM) 40 IRON & WINE Kiss Each Other Clean (4AD) 39 REAL ESTATE Days (DOMINO) 38 GRUFF RHYS Hotel Shampoo (TURNSTILE) 37 THE PEOPLE’S TEMPLE Sons Of Stone (HOZAC) 36 OTHER LIVES Tamer Animals (PLAY IT AGAIN SAM) 35 THE HORRIBLE CROWES Elsie (SIDEONEDUMMY) 34 THE DECEMBERISTS The King Is Dead (ROUGH TRADE) 33 KING CREOSOTE & JON HOPKINS Diamond Mine (DOMINO) 32 JONNY Jonny (ALSATIAN) 31 GIRLS Father, Son, Holy Ghost (TURNSTILE) 30 ATLAS SOUND Parallax (4AD) 29 EMA Past Life Martyred Saints (SOUTERRAIN TRANSMISSIONS) 28 WILD BEASTS Smother (DOMINO) 27 LAURA MARLING A Creature I Don't Know (VIRGIN) 26 ST VINCENT Strange Mercy (4AD) 25 JAMES BLAKE James Blake (ATLAS) 24 TUNE-YARDS W H O K I L L(4AD) 23 MIKAL CRONIN Mikal Cronin (TROUBLE IN MIND) 22 THE STRANGE BOYS Live Music (ROUGH TRADE) 21 BONNIE ‘PRINCE’ BILLY Wolfroy Goes To Town (DOMINO) 20 THE BLACK KEYS El Camino (NONESUCH) 19 THEE OH SEES Carrion Crawler/Dream (IN THE RED) 18 RYAN ADAMS Ashes And Fire (COLUMBIA) 17 METRONOMY The English Riviera (BECAUSE) 16 THE HORRORS Skying (XL) 15 JONATHAN WILSON Gentle Spirit (BELLA UNION) 14 RADIOHEAD The King Of Limbs (XL) 13 KATE BUSH 50 Words For Snow (FISH PEOPLE/EMI) 12 JOSH T PEARSON Last Of The Country Gentlemen (MUTE) 11 LOW C’Mon (SUB POP) 10 THE WAR ON DRUGS Slave Ambient (SECRETLY CANADIAN) 9 TOM WAITS Bad As Me (ANTI-) 8 BON IVER Bon Iver (4AD) 7 WHITE DENIM D (DOWNTOWN) 6 GILLIAN WELCH The Harrow & The Harvest (ACONY) 5 WILCO The Whole Love (DBPM/ANTI-) 4 BILL CALLAHAN Apocalypse (DRAG CITY) 3 FLEET FOXES Helplessness Blues (BELLA UNION) 2 KURT VILE Smoke Ring For My Halo (MATADOR) 1 PJ HARVEY Let England Shake (ISLAND) Follow me on Twitter: @JohnRMulvey

Just before Christmas, you may remember, I asked for your 2011 Top Tens, in response to my lengthy end-of-year effort.

I’ve done the maths now, anyhow, and am pleased to present a Top 50 compiled from your votes. Readers of the magazine may notice certain uncanny similarities with the Uncut writers’ Top 50 that we published in our issue out at the start of December: I know it looks like a bit of a fix, but this is genuinely how the numbers panned out.

Thanks again for helping us out with this. A good way to celebrate the launch of our new site, I think: please take a look around and let us know how it’s all working.

50 ONEOHTRIX POINT NEVER Replica (SOFTWARE)

49 FUCKED UP David Comes To Life (MATADOR)

48 WOODEN SHJIPS West (THRILL JOCKEY)

47 JULIANNA BARWICK The Magic Place (ASTHMATIC KITTY)

46 TIM HECKER Ravedeath, 1972 (KRANKY)

45 FEIST Metals (POLYDOR)

44 YOUTH LAGOON Year Of Hibernation (FAT POSSUM)

43 A.A.BONDY Believers (TURNSTILE)

42 DESTROYER Kaputt (DEAD OCEANS)

41 DRIVE-BY TRUCKERS Go-Go Boots (PLAY IT AGAIN SAM)

40 IRON & WINE Kiss Each Other Clean (4AD)

39 REAL ESTATE Days (DOMINO)

38 GRUFF RHYS Hotel Shampoo (TURNSTILE)

37 THE PEOPLE’S TEMPLE Sons Of Stone (HOZAC)

36 OTHER LIVES Tamer Animals (PLAY IT AGAIN SAM)

35 THE HORRIBLE CROWES Elsie (SIDEONEDUMMY)

34 THE DECEMBERISTS The King Is Dead (ROUGH TRADE)

33 KING CREOSOTE & JON HOPKINS Diamond Mine (DOMINO)

32 JONNY Jonny (ALSATIAN)

31 GIRLS Father, Son, Holy Ghost (TURNSTILE)

30 ATLAS SOUND Parallax (4AD)

29 EMA Past Life Martyred Saints (SOUTERRAIN TRANSMISSIONS)

28 WILD BEASTS Smother (DOMINO)

27 LAURA MARLING A Creature I Don’t Know (VIRGIN)

26 ST VINCENT Strange Mercy (4AD)

25 JAMES BLAKE James Blake (ATLAS)

24 TUNE-YARDS W H O K I L L(4AD)

23 MIKAL CRONIN Mikal Cronin (TROUBLE IN MIND)

22 THE STRANGE BOYS Live Music (ROUGH TRADE)

21 BONNIE ‘PRINCE’ BILLY Wolfroy Goes To Town (DOMINO)

20 THE BLACK KEYS El Camino (NONESUCH)

19 THEE OH SEES Carrion Crawler/Dream (IN THE RED)

18 RYAN ADAMS Ashes And Fire (COLUMBIA)

17 METRONOMY The English Riviera (BECAUSE)

16 THE HORRORS Skying (XL)

15 JONATHAN WILSON Gentle Spirit (BELLA UNION)

14 RADIOHEAD The King Of Limbs (XL)

13 KATE BUSH 50 Words For Snow (FISH PEOPLE/EMI)

12 JOSH T PEARSON Last Of The Country Gentlemen (MUTE)

11 LOW C’Mon (SUB POP)

10 THE WAR ON DRUGS Slave Ambient (SECRETLY CANADIAN)

9 TOM WAITS Bad As Me (ANTI-)

8 BON IVER Bon Iver (4AD)

7 WHITE DENIM D (DOWNTOWN)

6 GILLIAN WELCH The Harrow & The Harvest (ACONY)

5 WILCO The Whole Love (DBPM/ANTI-)

4 BILL CALLAHAN Apocalypse (DRAG CITY)

3 FLEET FOXES Helplessness Blues (BELLA UNION)

2 KURT VILE Smoke Ring For My Halo (MATADOR)

1 PJ HARVEY Let England Shake (ISLAND)

Follow me on Twitter: @JohnRMulvey

Charlie Watts talks up the chances of the Rolling Stones touring in 2012

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Drummer says 'it would be great' if the band could tour next year. Charlie Watts has talked up the chances of The Rolling Stones touring this year. Last year, it was reported that Richards and Mick Jagger were set to discuss plans for the 50th anniversary of the first Rolling Stones gig, which takes place on July 20, 2012 and the band's drummer has thrown his weight behind plans to play live with the band once again. He told BBC 6Music: "It would be lovely next year to do some shows because it will be 50 years. Ronnie [Wood] plays, I still play, Mick sings, he can do it anyway, I think Keith is doing some records." The sticksman also said that he really hoped the band could reunite as they were getting to an age where it is becoming harder and harder for them to think about touring extensively. He added: "It would be great if we did, we are just getting to an age where it's getting a bit difficult to get it together and it's such a bloody performance getting us together." The Rolling Stones played their first ever gig in London on July 12, 1962. They reissued their seminal 1978 album 'Some Girls' late last year.

Drummer says ‘it would be great’ if the band could tour next year.

Charlie Watts has talked up the chances of The Rolling Stones touring this year.

Last year, it was reported that Richards and Mick Jagger were set to discuss plans for the 50th anniversary of the first Rolling Stones gig, which takes place on July 20, 2012 and the band’s drummer has thrown his weight behind plans to play live with the band once again.

He told BBC 6Music: “It would be lovely next year to do some shows because it will be 50 years. Ronnie [Wood] plays, I still play, Mick sings, he can do it anyway, I think Keith is doing some records.”

The sticksman also said that he really hoped the band could reunite as they were getting to an age where it is becoming harder and harder for them to think about touring extensively.

He added: “It would be great if we did, we are just getting to an age where it’s getting a bit difficult to get it together and it’s such a bloody performance getting us together.”

The Rolling Stones played their first ever gig in London on July 12, 1962. They reissued their seminal 1978 album ‘Some Girls’ late last year.

Beach House complete work on new album?

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Electric Lady Studios have suggested that the duo have finished their fourth LP. Beach House have reportedly finished work on the follow up to 2010's 'Teen Dream'. The duo – made up of Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally – have apparently completed their fourth album at New York's iconic Electric Lady Studios. According to Pedestrian.tv, the studio posted a message on their Facebook page saying: "Just wrapped the new Beach House record in Studio A... such a rad record // band." However, the message was quickly taken down and the band's label Sub Pop have since told Gorilla Vs Bear blogger Chris Cantalini that the studio had "jumped the gun" when it came to breaking the news. Victoria Legrand of Beach House recently joined forces with Air on a song called 'Seven Stars'. Taken from Air's new LP 'Le Voyage Dans La Lune', the album is due for release on February 6. It is the French band's seventh album and their first since 2009's 'Love 2'.

Electric Lady Studios have suggested that the duo have finished their fourth LP.

Beach House have reportedly finished work on the follow up to 2010’s ‘Teen Dream’.

The duo – made up of Victoria Legrand and Alex Scally – have apparently completed their fourth album at New York’s iconic Electric Lady Studios. According to Pedestrian.tv, the studio posted a message on their Facebook page saying: “Just wrapped the new Beach House record in Studio A… such a rad record // band.”

However, the message was quickly taken down and the band’s label Sub Pop have since told Gorilla Vs Bear blogger Chris Cantalini that the studio had “jumped the gun” when it came to breaking the news.

Victoria Legrand of Beach House recently joined forces with Air on a song called ‘Seven Stars’. Taken from Air‘s new LP ‘Le Voyage Dans La Lune’, the album is due for release on February 6. It is the French band’s seventh album and their first since 2009’s ‘Love 2’.

Bon Iver’s Justin Vernon launches rarities record label

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Chigliak Records will release local Wisconsin acts, 'lost records' and new music Bon Iver's frontman Justin Vernon has launched his own label, called Chigliak Records. An imprint of Jagjaguwar, the label he himself is signed to, Chigliak Records will release music that was "never commercially released" or "locally released [in Wisconsin] and never put out on vinyl", as well as new music, reports Rolling Stone. Speaking to Pitchfork back in 2010, Vernon said the first release from the label would be from a band called Amateur Love, which featured Brad and Phil Cook, now of Megafaun. "They put out a record and it probably sold like 500 copies - it was like this electro-pop thing with a Neil Young or Paul Westerberg-quality songwriter, I shit you not," said Vernon. He went on to say of the label: "It's like a 'lost records' thing and I'm encouraging other people to send in records of their local heroes - totally unsigned shit that never went anywhere but is incredible." The name Chigliak is taken from a character on 1990s US TV series, Northern Exposure.

Chigliak Records will release local Wisconsin acts, ‘lost records’ and new music

Bon Iver‘s frontman Justin Vernon has launched his own label, called Chigliak Records.

An imprint of Jagjaguwar, the label he himself is signed to, Chigliak Records will release music that was “never commercially released” or “locally released [in Wisconsin] and never put out on vinyl”, as well as new music, reports Rolling Stone.

Speaking to Pitchfork back in 2010, Vernon said the first release from the label would be from a band called Amateur Love, which featured Brad and Phil Cook, now of Megafaun.

“They put out a record and it probably sold like 500 copies – it was like this electro-pop thing with a Neil Young or Paul Westerberg-quality songwriter, I shit you not,” said Vernon. He went on to say of the label: “It’s like a ‘lost records’ thing and I’m encouraging other people to send in records of their local heroes – totally unsigned shit that never went anywhere but is incredible.”

The name Chigliak is taken from a character on 1990s US TV series, Northern Exposure.

Simone Felice’s Solo Debut

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We’re still just about at that time of the year when there’s ample of it left to look forward to what’s coming up in the rest of it. Everybody’s at it, of course, it’s one of the things we do annually around now. And as I mentioned in last week’s newsletter, there’s a pretty comprehensive run-down of 2012’s essential major releases in the current issue of Uncut, including new albums from Patti Smith, PiL, Paul Weller, Paul McCartney, The National, Dirty Projectors, The Flaming Lips and Dylan LeBlanc, whose follow-up to his sterling debut, Paupers Field, is now long overdue. One new album that seems to have escaped our attention that I’ve been listening to a lot over the last week or so is the eponymous solo debut from Simone Felice, once of long-standing Uncut favourites The Felice Brothers and, more recently, The Duke & The King. I’m not sure where the release of Simone’s album leaves The Duke &The King, possibly high and dry, although that would be a withering shame after just two albums, the second of which, Long Live The Duke & The King, essayed a starling line in cosmic country soul, where in the space of a single track you could hear Neil Young and Sam Cooke, Bob Dylan and Sly Stone, Marvin Gaye, P-Funk and Curtis Mayfield, an alchemical brew of ravishing melodies and soaring four part harmonies. Simone’s album is less obviously expansive, but in most instances there are echoes on it of most of the above, the songs on the whole reminiscent of the solitary mood of more reflective Duke & the King numbers like “If You Ever Get Famous”, “Summer Morning Rain”, “One More American Song” and “Don’t Take That Plane Tonight”. Mostly, it’s just Simone, his voice and guitar, some drums here and there, forlorn harmonica elsewhere, hints of keyboards, banjo, with backing vocals on a few tracks from his brothers and on album opener, “Hey Bobby Ray”, the Catskill High School Trebleaires, a choir of girls from Simone’s home town, who bring a touch of gospel to proceedings that also surfaces on the rousing hillbilly testifying of “You & I Belong”, which apparently also features “friends from Mumford & Sons”. Other highlights include a stunning take on “New York Times”, a song that’s been in Simone’s repertoire for a couple of years, “Courtney Love”, “Dawn Brady’s Son” and “Sharon Tate”, which creepily evokes the murderous charisma of Charlie Manson and the horrors wrought by his so-called Family. The album’s released by Reveal Records, home of Joan As Policewoman, on April 2. Simone headlines London’s Bush Hall on April 27. See you there!

We’re still just about at that time of the year when there’s ample of it left to look forward to what’s coming up in the rest of it. Everybody’s at it, of course, it’s one of the things we do annually around now.

And as I mentioned in last week’s newsletter, there’s a pretty comprehensive run-down of 2012’s essential major releases in the current issue of Uncut, including new albums from Patti Smith, PiL, Paul Weller, Paul McCartney, The National, Dirty Projectors, The Flaming Lips and Dylan LeBlanc, whose follow-up to his sterling debut, Paupers Field, is now long overdue.

One new album that seems to have escaped our attention that I’ve been listening to a lot over the last week or so is the eponymous solo debut from Simone Felice, once of long-standing Uncut favourites The Felice Brothers and, more recently, The Duke & The King.

I’m not sure where the release of Simone’s album leaves The Duke &The King, possibly high and dry, although that would be a withering shame after just two albums, the second of which, Long Live The Duke & The King, essayed a starling line in cosmic country soul, where in the space of a single track you could hear Neil Young and Sam Cooke, Bob Dylan and Sly Stone, Marvin Gaye, P-Funk and Curtis Mayfield, an alchemical brew of ravishing melodies and soaring four part harmonies.

Simone’s album is less obviously expansive, but in most instances there are echoes on it of most of the above, the songs on the whole reminiscent of the solitary mood of more reflective Duke & the King numbers like “If You Ever Get Famous”, “Summer Morning Rain”, “One More American Song” and “Don’t Take That Plane Tonight”.

Mostly, it’s just Simone, his voice and guitar, some drums here and there, forlorn harmonica elsewhere, hints of keyboards, banjo, with backing vocals on a few tracks from his brothers and on album opener, “Hey Bobby Ray”, the Catskill High School Trebleaires, a choir of girls from Simone’s home town, who bring a touch of gospel to proceedings that also surfaces on the rousing hillbilly testifying of “You & I Belong”, which apparently also features “friends from Mumford & Sons”.

Other highlights include a stunning take on “New York Times”, a song that’s been in Simone’s repertoire for a couple of years, “Courtney Love”, “Dawn Brady’s Son” and “Sharon Tate”, which creepily evokes the murderous charisma of Charlie Manson and the horrors wrought by his so-called Family.

The album’s released by Reveal Records, home of Joan As Policewoman, on April 2. Simone headlines London’s Bush Hall on April 27.

See you there!

Howlin Wolf – Smokestack Lightning The Complete Chess Masters

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4CD box set charting the ascendance of the blues’ most distinctive voice. O-wooo! Chester ‘Howling Wolf’ Burnett never did make an easy fit for the world, at least not until he became an overnight sensation at the age of 42, bursting onto the post-war blues scene to claim his place as one o...

4CD box set charting the ascendance of the blues’ most distinctive voice. O-wooo!

Chester ‘Howling Wolf’ Burnett never did make an easy fit for the world, at least not until he became an overnight sensation at the age of 42, bursting onto the post-war blues scene to claim his place as one of the music’s titans, a status time has only enhanced. His primal growl arrived as a force of nature – “This is where the soul of man never dies” producer Sam Phillips famously declared. No-one has ever sounded like Wolf, before or since.

The 97 tracks here document only the first decade of his recording career, and even then there are omissions from his tangled start – the sessions he cut for other labels – but they confirm him as a “true blues immortal” as Dick Shurman puts it in his liner notes. Present are only a clutch of the sides that branded a generation of Brit and U.S. bluesers and which they duly made into standards in the 1960s – the crooked lope of “Smokestack Lightning”, the hypnotic “Spoonful”, the forlorn “Sitting On Top Of The World” – but the extras and alternate takes amount to a serious treat. The whole package is delivered with restrained good taste, with a slew of evocative pictures and graphics, and a brace of classy essays, Peter Guralnick being the other scribe present. The crucible of 1950s Southside Chicago is brought to bubbling life.

One thing that springs from those black and white photos is the sheer exuberance of Wolf, a hulking giant who was nonetheless always dapper. There’s an odd disconnect between his artful tie-pins and geniality and that gravel pit of a voice and the pain and anguish it conveys, a disjunction explained by his early life. The 1950s were a time of happiness and success for Wolf. The self-destructive ways of many of his peers were never a temptation. He was financially astute and happily married. Yet he remained stubborn and suspicious, and the scars of his previous life clearly ran deep: a troubled, dirt poor childhood in Mississippi that included estrangement from his mother, hard graft on his father’s farm, an unhappy spell in the army, the grinding life of an itinerant bluesman in the segregated south.

To the young Wolf, only music made sense of the world. The mentoring role of Charlie Patton, whom the twenty year old Wolf met in 1930, when Patton was top draw on the delta blues scene, was pivotal in shaping what followed. Wolf’s “Saddle My Pony”, for example, is a direct descendant of Patton’s “Pony Blues” and “Smokestack Lightning” itself is modeled on Patton’s “Moon Going Down”.

It’s astonishing it took so long for Wolf to get recorded – he was a celebrated performer first in Mississippi, then in Memphis, where he relocated. It took Sam Phillips, a visionary contemptuous of the south’s segregation code, to put him on disc, licensing tracks cut in his Memphis studio to Chess in Chicago. A third of what’s here originated with Phillips, who always cited Wolf as the purest, most instinctive talent of a roster that includes Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash, Jerry Lee Lewis and B.B. King.` Wolf’s decampment to Chicago and Chess in 1954 hurt Phillips badly.

Philips’ faith in Wolf was instantly rewarded when “Moaning At Midnight”/“How Many More Years” became a double-headed number one on the R&B charts. Both still sound bitingly fresh, setting Wolf’s buzz-saw vocals – punctuated by that trademark falsetto howl – and droning harp against the dazzle of Willie Johnson’s guitar, a mix of delta picking, T-Bone Walker be-bop, and proto power chords. Because microphones overloaded under the sheer power of Wolf’s voice, his rasp emerged as electrified as Johnson’s guitar, a delivery that was later imitated by DJ Wolfman Jack and Captain Beefheart.

It took Wolf a couple of years and a move to Chicago – he proudly drove there in his own station wagon – to top his debut. “Smokestack Lightning” and the menacing “Evil” surely did so, with “Baby How Long” another contender. Nonetheless the mid to late 1950s represent a lull in Wolf’s output after his spectacular arrival. Chess, flush with the success of Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley, could afford to let him freewheel. Wolf recorded mostly self-written originals; simple songs about the pain of betrayed lovers, a parade of heartache, broken homes and his baby buying a train ticket “as long as my right arm”. Yet Wolf was capable of delicious irony on say, “Sitting On Top Of The World” (“She’s gone but I don’t worry”), and in “The Natchez Burning” he wrote a famous memorial for the 200 clubgoers killed in a 1940 Chicago fire.

What moved things on from routine fare like ”That’s Alright” and “Rockin’ Daddy” was in part the quality of his sidemen. The young Hubert Sumlin, (who died December 4th 2011) summoned from Memphis, quickly developed the piercing riffs and curlicued solos that became a signature of Wolf’s later output (try “I’m Leaving”), and which made him a hero to the likes of Jimmy Page and Jeff Beck. Chess sessioneers included outstanding players like pianists Otis Spann and Hosea Lee Kennard – the latter’s hammering keyboard elevates the second half of this collection – while bassist Willie Dixon was a prize songwriter and arranger. Another relocated southerner, Dixon had supplied Wolf with “Evil” before a fall-out with the Chess brothers over money. When he returned he hit a dazzling streak that included “Wang Dang Doodle”, “ Back Door Man” and “Spoonful” – a trinity that closes this compilation – and later “Little Red Rooster” and “I Ain’t Superstitious” among others.

Discs three and four, with their flurries of out-takes and studio banter, give a pungent taste of how these masterpieces were created; with a mixture of tiresome persistence, exceptional skill and pure love for a music that was so often about being unloved.

Neil Spencer

The Little Willies – For The Good Times

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Second collection of old-school country and western covers from Norah Jones and co. ..By sheer dint of the fact she plays the piano and occasionally dips into the Great American Songbook, Norah Jones finds herself marketed as a lounge jazz singer, a category error compounded by the fact that her sales have all but bankrolled the Blue Note label for more than a decade. Of course, she’ll be the first to admit that she’s not a jazz musician. Listening to her albums, Jones makes more sense viewed as a bucolic country singer who wears her jazz chops lightly; pitched (on some nebulous jazz/country continuum) somewhere jazzwards of Willie Nelson, but a little twangier than Ray Charles. She rarely sounds as comfortable as she does in The Little Willies, the classic C&W covers band she started in 2003 with four New York pals. One of them is Lee Alexander, her erstwhile partner and bassist; when the couple split in 2007 it was assumed that The Little Willies would not reconvene, especially when Alexander left Manhattan to build and race sportscars in Nevada. But their split was clearly amicable enough to reunite for a second album. The band’s 2006 debut was recorded in just two days with no overdubs, initially to test out the acoustics of a studio that Jones had built with Alexander. Album number two – laid down live in only three days – follows a similar template, comprising covers of classic country songs by the likes of Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson (the last, of course, inspiring the band’s name). The band’s elder statesman is lead guitarist Jim Campilongo (the Bert Weedon of Brooklyn hipsters), and the lead vocalist on half of the songs is Richard Julian (a singer-songwriter who has recorded a few albums of his own songs, featuring members of Bright Eyes and Wilco), but the band’s USP remains Jones’s beautifully groggy voice. On tracks like Hank Williams’ “Lovesick Blues” or Willie Nelson’s heartbreaking “Permanently Lonely”, it’s those woozy, sighing backing vocals that leap out from the speakers. It’s enough to turn even the jauntiest novelty songs – like “Fowl Owl On The Prowl” (a pastiche song knocked out in a hurry by Quincy Jones from the soundtrack to In The Heat Of The Night) or Burl Ives’ “Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves” (the “Louie Louie” of trucking songs) – into lovely, lazy slumber ballads, their spikiest elements liquefied by Jones’s contributions. Jones, of course, is not your usual feisty, spit-and-sawdust country diva, and some tales play very differently when she sings lead. When Loretta Lynn sings “Fist City” you can visualise the narrowed eyes, the spinning handbag and the Popeye fists; when Dolly Parton pleads “Jolene”, you can hear the quiet desperation and the implied threat. But, in Jones’s hands, these rugged, rough-hewn songs are sanded down, polished to take on a different, rustic charm. Only it’s not too polished. For five exceptionally good musicians (all except Richard Julian trained at one of America’s finest jazz and improvisation conservatoires), it’s surprising how sparingly they play. Nashville music – both in its classic honkytonk and its ickier recent guises – has a tendency to pile on the strings, the harmonies, the fiddles and the pedal steel, but The Little Willies keep things gorgeously spartan, with barely an unnecessary note played anywhere. As a result there is no unearned sentiment, and Jones and co manage to eke emotions from Kris Kristofferson’s tear-jerking “For The Good Time” that neither KK nor Elvis Presley managed, and locate a core to Hank Williams’ “Remember Me” that eluded Rickie Lee Jones. It’s that discipline that stops this from being a self-indulgent, back-slapping bar-room session and turns it into something sublime. John Lewis Q&A Richard Julian You record very fast, which seems astonishing in an age when bands spend months in the studio... The thing is we’re not having to write material or work out our “sound”. We’re playing old material and we’ve already got our sound figured out from live shows! This time it took a little longer. A track like “Jolene” had no real arrangement, it’s just us trying to zoom into each other and get a vibe. That proved to be a little harder to capture, so we had to try it a few times before we found a take that worked. But we still finished the whole thing in three days. How do you and Norah divvy up the lead vocals? It’s just whatever sounds good. Some songs suit her better, some suit me. On “Foul Owl” she starts off on the bottom and ends up on top. Not everyone who becomes successful at music at her level is a great musician. They might be an interesting artist, or have an interesting image. But Norah – you can stick her in any musical context and she can handle it, cos she’s got great ears. Here she shows that she can be a rhythm section player. The standard criticism is that these are pointless cover versions by bourgeois New Yorkers – what’s your response? There’s always the question of “are you authentic enough”? We’re not “authentic” in the sense that we don’t have a fiddle or a pedal steel and we don’t sing in a certain accent. But we’re authentic to ourselves, in that we’re not affected. And hopefully we’re introducing people to songs by obscure guys like Ralph Stanley or Red Simpson. Thing is, there’s plenty to chew on with our versions because we’ve got some terrific musicians. “Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves” is a bit of a novelty song, but I think we make it sound kinda... sexy. Ha ha!

Second collection of old-school country and western covers from Norah Jones and co. ..By sheer dint of the fact she plays the piano and occasionally dips into the Great American Songbook, Norah Jones finds herself marketed as a lounge jazz singer, a category error compounded by the fact that her sales have all but bankrolled the Blue Note label for more than a decade. Of course, she’ll be the first to admit that she’s not a jazz musician. Listening to her albums, Jones makes more sense viewed as a bucolic country singer who wears her jazz chops lightly; pitched (on some nebulous jazz/country continuum) somewhere jazzwards of Willie Nelson, but a little twangier than Ray Charles.

She rarely sounds as comfortable as she does in The Little Willies, the classic C&W covers band she started in 2003 with four New York pals. One of them is Lee Alexander, her erstwhile partner and bassist; when the couple split in 2007 it was assumed that The Little Willies would not reconvene, especially when Alexander left Manhattan to build and race sportscars in Nevada. But their split was clearly amicable enough to reunite for a second album.

The band’s 2006 debut was recorded in just two days with no overdubs, initially to test out the acoustics of a studio that Jones had built with Alexander. Album number two – laid down live in only three days – follows a similar template, comprising covers of classic country songs by the likes of Johnny Cash, Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson (the last, of course, inspiring the band’s name).

The band’s elder statesman is lead guitarist Jim Campilongo (the Bert Weedon of Brooklyn hipsters), and the lead vocalist on half of the songs is Richard Julian (a singer-songwriter who has recorded a few albums of his own songs, featuring members of Bright Eyes and Wilco), but the band’s USP remains Jones’s beautifully groggy voice. On tracks like Hank Williams’ “Lovesick Blues” or Willie Nelson’s heartbreaking “Permanently Lonely”, it’s those woozy, sighing backing vocals that leap out from the speakers. It’s enough to turn even the jauntiest novelty songs – like “Fowl Owl On The Prowl” (a pastiche song knocked out in a hurry by Quincy Jones from the soundtrack to In The Heat Of The Night) or Burl Ives’ “Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves” (the “Louie Louie” of trucking songs) – into lovely, lazy slumber ballads, their spikiest elements liquefied by Jones’s contributions.

Jones, of course, is not your usual feisty, spit-and-sawdust country diva, and some tales play very differently when she sings lead. When Loretta Lynn sings “Fist City” you can visualise the narrowed eyes, the spinning handbag and the Popeye fists; when Dolly Parton pleads “Jolene”, you can hear the quiet desperation and the implied threat. But, in Jones’s hands, these rugged, rough-hewn songs are sanded down, polished to take on a different, rustic charm.

Only it’s not too polished. For five exceptionally good musicians (all except Richard Julian trained at one of America’s finest jazz and improvisation conservatoires), it’s surprising how sparingly they play. Nashville music – both in its classic honkytonk and its ickier recent guises – has a tendency to pile on the strings, the harmonies, the fiddles and the pedal steel, but The Little Willies keep things gorgeously spartan, with barely an unnecessary note played anywhere. As a result there is no unearned sentiment, and Jones and co manage to eke emotions from Kris Kristofferson’s tear-jerking “For The Good Time” that neither KK nor Elvis Presley managed, and locate a core to Hank Williams’ “Remember Me” that eluded Rickie Lee Jones. It’s that discipline that stops this from being a self-indulgent, back-slapping bar-room session and turns it into something sublime.

John Lewis

Q&A Richard Julian

You record very fast, which seems astonishing in an age when bands spend months in the studio…

The thing is we’re not having to write material or work out our “sound”. We’re playing old material and we’ve already got our sound figured out from live shows! This time it took a little longer. A track like “Jolene” had no real arrangement, it’s just us trying to zoom into each other and get a vibe. That proved to be a little harder to capture, so we had to try it a few times before we found a take that worked. But we still finished the whole thing in three days.

How do you and Norah divvy up the lead vocals?

It’s just whatever sounds good. Some songs suit her better, some suit me. On “Foul Owl” she starts off on the bottom and ends up on top. Not everyone who becomes successful at music at her level is a great musician. They might be an interesting artist, or have an interesting image. But Norah – you can stick her in any musical context and she can handle it, cos she’s got great ears. Here she shows that she can be a rhythm section player.

The standard criticism is that these are pointless cover versions by bourgeois New Yorkers – what’s your response?

There’s always the question of “are you authentic enough”? We’re not “authentic” in the sense that we don’t have a fiddle or a pedal steel and we don’t sing in a certain accent. But we’re authentic to ourselves, in that we’re not affected. And hopefully we’re introducing people to songs by obscure guys like Ralph Stanley or Red Simpson. Thing is, there’s plenty to chew on with our versions because we’ve got some terrific musicians. “Diesel Smoke, Dangerous Curves” is a bit of a novelty song, but I think we make it sound kinda… sexy. Ha ha!

The Iron Lady

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Thatcher: The Motion Picture DIRECTED BY Phyllida Lloyd STARRING Meryl Streep, Jim Broadbent Rarely has the disparity between the quality of a performance and the quality of a film been so striking. Meryl Streep compellingly inhabits Thatcher, from the autocratic bouffant to the conservative...

Thatcher: The Motion Picture
DIRECTED BY Phyllida Lloyd
STARRING Meryl Streep, Jim Broadbent

Rarely has the disparity between the quality of a performance and the quality of a film been so striking.

Meryl Streep compellingly inhabits Thatcher, from the autocratic bouffant to the conservative court shoes. But partly as a result of Abi Morgan’s diffident screenplay and partly due to Phyllida Lloyd’s plodding and conventional direction, the film has little of interest to say about either the woman or the period of British history she shaped.

Lady Thatcher’s life, pre and during her political career, is reduced to a series of vignettes, with the film’s emphasis falling firmly on the latter part of her life, showing her as an elderly lady mourning her husband, Dennis (Jim Broadbent). Streep handles it effectively – occasional acidic flashes of the old Thatcher sporadically cut through the fog of senility.

But if the idea is to humanise the woman, it’s rather wasted. If there’s one thing Margaret Thatcher won’t be remembered for, it’s her humanity.
WENDY IDE